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Buddha at the Gas Pump

754. Julia Mossbridge – The Science of Unconditional Love — Nonspeakers, Psi Abilities, and Healing

Buddha at the Gas Pump

Rick Archer

Society & Culture, Religion & Spirituality, Spirituality, Philosophy

4.7737 Ratings

🗓️ 8 May 2026

⏱️ 118 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Teaching AI to love, the physics of unconditional love, and telepathy with non-speaking autistic people all come together in this lively Buddha at the Gas Pump conversation with neuroscientist and futurist Julia Mossbridge. In this wide-ranging dialogue, we explore unconditional love as a real, foundational force in the universe and what it means for consciousness, time, technology, trauma, and disclosure.

Julia describes her working model of universal love as “that which connects,” a fundamental force more basic than space, time, matter, and energy. She explains how unconditional love is the human emotional and motivational state that arises when we become directly aware of this ever-present universal love, and why that experience paradoxically makes us more motivated to improve the world even though “nothing needs to change.” Along the way, she and Rick unpack the difference between unconditional and conditional love, the pitfalls of spiritual bypassing, and the limits of “purification” models in spirituality and healing.

They then turn to the ethics and possibilities of “loving AI”: can we create AI systems and robots that genuinely support human well-being and help people access unconditional love, instead of amplifying our polarization and fear? Julia shares the origins of the Loving AI project, her work on Socratic GPT tools for critical thinking, and her leadership in efforts to bring more feminine and marginalized voices into AI, robotics, cognitive science, and consciousness research, including The Synapse women’s conference.

Another major theme is time and precognition. Drawing on her neuroscience background, Julia discusses empirical work on precognition and self-transcendence, including how difficult life circumstances can sometimes push people into profound, love-filled states in which they recognize themselves as “the flame, not the candle.”

The conversation also dives into “The Telepathy Tapes” and Julia’s research with non-speaking autistic people who communicate via letterboards and keyboards. She outlines why equating speech with intelligence is scientifically and ethically untenable, and how spontaneous telepathy, “the Hill,” and rich inner lives in non-speaking autistic individuals challenge mainstream assumptions about mind, communication, and consciousness.

In the later part of the interview, Julia talks about her book “Have a Nice Disclosure,” which reframes disclosure not just as governments revealing secrets about advanced programs or possible non-human intelligences, but as an inner process of truth-telling, healing, and reconciliation. She and Rick explore how collective and personal shadow material is surfacing globally, why genuine disclosure must happen in the heart as well as in institutions, and how unconditional love can hold even the darkest aspects of our history.

Julia Mossbridge focuses ruthlessly on developing a deep understanding of love, time, technology, and how these human experiences relate to corresponding physical forces. Her most recent relevant projects include: Creating a Socratic GPT to guide intelligence analysts through the critical thinking process, leading a diverse team of technologists and designers to create a scalable, self-guided digital tool that increases overall wellbeing and is now being developed further within Native American communities, and leading an international group of AI developers and roboticists toward creating an unconditionally loving robot that reduced anger and cognitive load in humans.

Transcript

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0:00.0

He said, look, Julia, I had this dream, like a little dream at night, that we were all sitting in a room and like a conference room.

0:09.8

And there was, outside the windows, you could see just devastation.

0:14.0

And someone said, if only we taught the machines how to love.

0:16.7

And he's like, I want to, I want to make that not happen.

0:19.2

Do you think we can teach AI to love?

0:32.6

Welcome to Buddha at the Gas Pump.

0:35.1

My name is Rick Archer.

0:37.2

Buddha at the Gas pump is an ongoing series

0:39.7

of conversations with spiritually awakening people and about spiritual topics. We've done over

0:46.3

750 of them now, and if you would like to check out previous ones, you can certainly do so on

0:52.5

YouTube, but if you go to Batgap.com, you'll see them

0:55.1

organized in various ways that would be hard to organize on YouTube. This also exists as an

1:00.5

audio podcast if you like to subscribe to those. The whole thing is made possible through the

1:05.2

support of appreciative listeners and viewers. We don't run ads. If you appreciate it, we'd like to help support it,

1:12.7

please go to batgap.com and you'll see PayPal buttons and a page explaining alternatives to

1:18.3

PayPal. My guest today is Julia Mossbridge. I've kind of known Julia for quite a few years

1:26.1

because she spoke at the Science and Non-Duality Conference a number of times, and I always saw those presentations and found her very interesting.

1:34.0

So it's really great to be able to have an extended conversation with her now.

1:38.9

So welcome, Julia.

1:40.6

Hey, thank you.

1:42.1

It's wonderful to be here.

1:43.2

I've been wanting to be on the show for a while, and apparently I forgot that I was invited previously.

...

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